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Rain Shadow

A rain shadow is a dry region of land on the side of a mountain range that is protected from the prevailing winds. Prevailing winds are the winds that occur most of the time in a particular location on the Earth. The protected side of a mountain range is also called the lee side or the down-wind side.

Prevailing winds carry air toward the mountain range. As the air rises up over a mountain range, the air cools, water vapor condenses, and clouds form. On this side of the mountains, called the windward side, precipitation falls in the form of rain or snow. The windward side of a mountain range is moist and lush due to this precipitation.

Once the air passes over the mountain range, it moves down the other side, warms, and dries out. This dry air is usually caused by foehn winds and produces a rain shadow. Land in a rain shadow is typically very dry and receives much less precipitation and cloud cover than land on the windward side of the mountain range.

Some examples of rain shadow deserts in North America include:

The east side of the Coast Mountains and Cascade Range in British Columbia, Canada

The dry basins east of the Cascade Range in Washington and Oregon

The Great Basin of Nevada and Utah, east of the Sierra Nevada mountain range

The Mohave, Sonoran, and Chihuahuan deserts in the United States and Mexico

The Colorado Front Range, east of the Rocky Mountains

Rain shadow deserts can be found in other areas of the world, including the following:

The Gobi Desert in Mongolia and China is in a rain shadow due to the towering Himalaya mountain range

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